sonu_gmat Wrote:The war, lasting for 60 days, was faught b/w A & B.
The war, which lasted for 60days, was fought b/w A & B.
what is "b/w"?
from context, i'll assume that it means "between", but i've never seen this before. the only "b/w" i've ever seen is "black & white", as for television sets.)
an admonishment:
please, please,
DO NOT USE ABBREVIATIONS IN YOUR EXAMPLES AND QUESTIONS.this is especially important since you are a relatively frequent poster here these days.
we thank you in advance for taking the extra 0.5 seconds required to type "between" in its entirety.
--
Is first one wrong because it uses present participle 'lasting'. I've seen such usage. This not a official problem. This is a part of an SC which I rephrased it for my understanding. I went with first one because it is less wordy. But the second one is OA.
Following is from one of MGMAT staff's post.
if the participial phrase comes before the verb of the main clause, then you usually can check it with the rule that you're propounding:
(1) joe, racing down the wet sidewalk, slipped and fell.
(2) racing down the wet sidewalk, joe slipped and fell.
either of these sentences means the same thing as 'joe slipped and fell as/while he was racing down the wet sidewalk'. by contrast, trying to place the participle after the verb - joe slipped and fell, racing down the sidewalk - yields a sentence that doesn't make any sense.
note the difference between my example sentence and yours.
joe, racing down the sidewalk, slipped and fell makes sense.
in particular, you DON'T want "racing" and "slipped and fell" to be PARALLEL, because the IDEAS are not parallel: one event (slipped and fell) happened DURING or AS PART OF of the other event (racing down the sidewalk).
if i were to write this as a parallel construction -
joe raced down the sidewalk, slipped, and fell - it wouldn't make sense, because that would imply that (a) racing down the sidewalk, (b) slipping, and (c) falling were all events of equal priority (which were not necessarily related, and, presumably occurred in sequence).
your example, on the other hand, is not like this.
in your example, THE TWO IDEAS ARE COMPLETELY PARALLEL: both of them are standalone, unrelated facts about the war.
therefore, the verbs should be in the same tense. in the case of "the war, which lasted 60 days, was fought between A and B", this is the case: "lasted" and "fought" are both in the simple past tense.
if you wrote "the war, lasting 60 days, was fought between A and B", that's the wrong relationship. think about joe's running down the sidewalk when, all of a sudden, he slipped and fell; the war was NOT busy lasting for sixty days when, all of a sudden, it was fought between a and b. that makes no sense.
Is 'continued on' redundant?
yes. this would be a fatal error if it appeared on the gmat.
as would "reply back", "added bonus", etc.
If the second choice were "X continued working, in spite of recurrent injuries,and always hoped to return......." would it have been correct?
Thanks in advance.
that's probably
acceptable, but it's inferior to the correct version.
* first, "hoping" was an ongoing process, contemporaneous with "working", so the parallelism makes sense. moreover, the use of "-ing" to represent an ongoing process is appropriate.
* second, and more importantly, "
and hoped" does not imply any relationship between the actions in the sentence and "hoping". since the sentence is clearly intended to imply such a relationship, this is illogical.
examples:
*
joe trained hard and ate lots of food, hoping to become a professional bodybuilder --> this is the preferred version. the -ing modifier CONNECTS the IDEA of "hoping" to the other two actions - i.e., joe undertook these actions because he was hoping to become a bodybuilder. moreover, "trained" and "ate" themselves are in parallel because they are contemporaneous but
separate actions (i.e., neither is the genesis of the other).
*
joe trained hard, ate lots of food, and hoped to become a professional bodybuilder --> this may look superficially good because all three verbs are parallel, but it's specious parallelism. these verbs
shouldn't be parallel, because "hoping" was an ongoing thing
associated with the other two (which, in turn,
should be parallel because they are contemporaneous but separate actions).
this stuff is pretty subtle. indeed, you may find that your best course of action is simply to commit the acceptable versions to memory, and then look for sentences that look like them.
that's the entire way we learn language as kids - imitate the "proper" speech of adults - so it may be the best way to go here, too. unless you have a
ridiculous memory, it's probably not worthwhile to try to memorize all the "rules" governing subtleties such as this one.